Last time I dabbled in the art of geotagging was back in 2008 when I wrote about it here. It was quite a laborious task back then with having to manually specify on a map where a photo was taken #nothanks
Thankfully things have moved on slightly since then and smartphones and some digital cameras (the rugged/outdoorsy type) automatically add locale information into each shot utilizing built-in GPS devices. However more often than not, high-end cameras do not have this capability.
Hiking anyone?
I have this thing whereby I do something, like it and go all out and buy the kit. Thankfully eBay is at hand so I don’t need to pay full price for some of my techno geek gadgets that I "need" (helps settle that internal struggle of wanting all things beepy and squeaky versus the do I really need it question).
Anyway bought a mint condition Garmin eTrex 10 on eBay for around 60 bucks. These are very capable GPS units creating accurate track logs in GPX format.
So off on my hike I went, a track log being created as I walked (think Hansel and Gretel and those bread crumbs), taking random snaps with my camera along the way. At the end of it I was left with a bunch of photos and a GPX track file.
Off-topic but I toyed with the idea of getting a GPS device with maps built in but you really don’t need to; learn how to navigate using a grid reference system. Many GPS units like the eTrex 10 can be switched to display grid units compatible with a physical map instead of longitude and latitude coordinates.
It’s all about the metadata
It’s certainly not all about you! That selfie you just took doesn't just contain
That "stuff" (technical term for metadata) is stored in a standard format known Exchangeable image file format or Exif within the image file itself and can be manipulated without interfering with the actual image.
Hello Exiftool!
There’s a bunch of software out there that can manipulate an image’s metadata including where the photo was taken. Exiftool is one of them and it’s free and open source. In fact some of the paid software I’ve seen such as HoudahGeo bolt onto this tool so if you already have a GPX track, why do you need to pay for such tools (yep, you don’t!)
Exiftool can read in a GPX track file and based on the time and date of a photo, it can determine where on the track it was taken and update the image's metadata with its locale information accordingly.
With Exiftool installed on my Mac and the GPX track file (named mytrack.gpx) and photos in the same folder, I can execute the following to geotag my photos:
exiftool -P -geotag mytrack.gpx .If the camera’s clock was set to a different timezone, use the geotime tag to specify that. I took my camera to the UK and had the camera time set to GMT (UTC+0). The following worked for me to geotag my photos once I returned:
exiftool -P -geotag mytrack.gpx '-geotime<${DateTimeOriginal}+00:00' .For more information on geotagging with Exiftool see http://cpansearch.perl.org/src/EXIFTOOL/Image-ExifTool-9.90/html/geotag.html
Top Tip #1: Yep it’s therefore
Top Tip #2: While Exiftool won't overwrite your original photos (at least by default), it will append _original to the filename and it’s rather annoying in case you need to do a quick restore. I therefore suggest you make a quick copy the entire set of images/image folder first.
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